Vascular inflammation inhibits gene transfer to the pulmonary circulation in vivo (original) (raw)
The American journal of physiology, 1999
Abstract
We report gene transfer to the normal and injured murine pulmonary circulation via systemic (intravascular) and airway (intratracheal) delivery of novel polycationic liposomes (imidazolium chloride, imidazolinium chloride-cholesterol, and ethyl phosphocholine). With use of the reporter genes chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) or human placental alkaline phosphatase (hpAP), intravascular injection of lipid-DNA complexes resulted in gene expression primarily in the lung, with lesser expression in the heart (11% of lung, P < 0.05) and spleen (8% of lung, P < 0.05). Histochemical staining for the hpAP reporter gene showed localized transgene expression in the microvascular endothelium. Monocrotaline (80 mg/kg body wt sc) treatment produced endovascular inflammation and reduced lung CAT activity (2 days postintravascular transfection) by 75 +/- 8 and 86 +/- 6% at 7 and 21 days, respectively, after monocrotaline (P < 0. 05). Despite the apparent decrease in functional CAT pr...
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